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Oregon Late Fees & Rent Collection Laws

Late Fees compliance guide for Oregon, Usa. Covers landlord-tenant regulations, requirements, and legal obligations.

Melvin Prince
4 min read
Verified Apr 2026United States flag
oregonUsaLate feesComplianceLandlord-tenant-law

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.Information last verified: April 2026.

Grace Period
4 Days
Flat Fee Cap
Reasonable
Per-Diem Cap
6% of flat fee

Oregon Late Fees & Rent Collection Laws

Oregon has one of the most structured and detailed late fee systems in the nation under ORS 90.260. Late fees are tightly regulated, with a mandatory grace period, multiple capped calculation methods, and a prohibition on using non-payment of late fees as grounds for a non-payment eviction.

Late Fees Must Be in Writing

A landlord cannot charge a late fee unless the specific terms are clearly stated in the written rental agreement. If the lease is silent on late fees, no fee can be charged.

Mandatory 4-Day Grace Period

A late charge cannot be imposed until rent is more than 4 days late. This means a landlord cannot assess a late fee until the 5th day of the rental period. The 4-day period is a statutory minimum; landlords may choose to provide a longer grace period in the lease.

Structured Late Fee Options

Oregon law provides three permitted late fee structures. A landlord may choose one (or a combination, as outlined in the statute):

MethodDescription
Flat FeeA reasonable flat amount, charged once per rental period.
Per-Day FeeA reasonable per-day charge, beginning on the 5th day, that is no greater than 6% of the flat fee OR a reasonable amount based on actual administrative costs.
5% Per 5-Day Block5% of the periodic rent payment, charged once for each succeeding 5-day period (or portion) that the payment remains delinquent, beginning on the 5th day.

The key word across all options is "reasonable." Courts will assess whether the fee is a reasonable approximation of the landlord's actual costs incurred due to the late payment.

Non-Payment of Late Fees ≠ Eviction for Non-Payment

A critical distinction in Oregon: non-payment of a late charge alone is NOT grounds for terminating a tenancy for non-payment of rent. If a tenant pays rent but refuses to pay the late fee, the landlord cannot issue a non-payment eviction notice.

However, the unpaid late charge can be grounds for termination for cause under ORS 90.392 (with a 30-day notice and 14-day cure period), which is a slower process.

Prohibition on Deducting Late Fees from Future Rent

A landlord is prohibited from deducting a previously assessed late charge from a current or future rent payment and then treating that payment as deficient. This prevents landlords from artificially creating a "non-payment" situation to pursue eviction.

Best Practices for Oregon Landlords

  1. Choose One Clear Late Fee Method: Pick the flat fee or the 5%-per-5-day method and spell it out precisely in your lease. Don't try to combine methods in confusing ways.
  2. Never Evict for Late Fees Alone: Remember that non-payment of a late fee is a lease violation (cause), not a non-payment issue. Use the correct notice type (30-day with 14-day cure).
  3. Track the Grace Period Precisely: Your property management system must know that day 1-4 = no fee, day 5+ = fee begins.

How Landager Can Help

Landager enforces Oregon's structured late fee rules automatically. The system applies the 4-day grace period, calculates fees using your chosen method within the statutory caps, and correctly categorizes unpaid late fees as a cause issue—never conflating them with non-payment of rent.

Back to Oregon Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Sources & Official References

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